The T.A.B. Timeline

Reviewing the major events in the ongoing controversy of T.A.B. expenditures during last fall's campaigns

The Texas Association of Business collected $1.9 million from corporate donors to pay for a direct-mail campaign to influence the November elections. The mailers targeted 24 legislative races, primarily attacking Democratic candidates, but the T.A.B. says that because they did not explicitly encourage voters to cast their ballot one way or another, it does not have to publicly disclose who paid for the campaign ads. That's one central issue in the district attorney's investigation and the related lawsuits; another is whether there was any potentially illegal "coordination" with any candidate's campaign.

October 2002:Political attack ads begin arriving in mailboxes across Texas, including the Austin area, where Democratic contenders -- Sen. Gonzalo Barrientos, Rep. Ann Kitchen, James Sylvester, and Patrick Rose -- are in tight races against T.A.B.-endorsed candidates. They list the T.A.B. logo only, and the group will later argue that these are "voter education" mailings and therefore unregulated free speech.

February 2003: T.A.B. and Hammond sue Earle in federal court claiming First Amendment protections that would prevent Hammond from having to testify and turn over information on corporate donors. U.S. district judge punts lawsuit to state court. Hearing set for March 25.

March 2003:Grand-jury investigation turns to possible "coordination" of ad campaign between T.A.B., Texans for a Republican Majority, and Law Enforcement Alliance of America, to determine whether one or more of the groups coordinated efforts with individual campaigns. The law forbids coordination on "issue" ads paid for with unregulated corporate funds.

Public-relations consultant Craig McDonald is ordered to testify before grand jury with limited immunity; after some legal wrangling, McDonald agrees to turn over a limited number of documents related to ad campaign.

John Colyandro, former executive director of the Republican Majority group, and former T.A.B. lobbyist Lara Laneri Keel testify before grand jury.

State District Judge Mike Lynch hears arguments from lawyers on both sides of the grand jury investigation.